Ontario’s native bats are on the decline. Since 2012, four of the province’s eight species — little brown myotis, eastern...
Ontario’s native bats are on the decline. Since 2012, four of the province’s eight species — little brown myotis, eastern small-footed myotis, northern myotis and tri-coloured bat — have been listed as endangered, mainly as a result of a condition known as white-nose syndrome. (Three of these species are also listed as endangered by the Committee on...
Ontario’s native bats are on the decline. Since 2012, four of the province’s eight species — little brown myotis, eastern small-footed myotis, northern myotis and tri-coloured bat — have been listed as endangered, mainly as a result of a condition known as white-nose syndrome. (Three of these species are also listed as endangered by the Committee on...
To mark World Water Day 2018, TRCA is sharing the following article, which first appeared in Revitalization News on December 15, 2017. Not long ago,...
To mark World Water Day 2018, TRCA is sharing the following article,...
To mark World Water Day 2018, TRCA is sharing the following article, which first appeared in Revitalization News on December 15, 2017. Not long ago, Barry Laverick was invited to his daughter’s fourth grade class in Markham, Ontario to talk about...